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A wondrous array of extremely short live action, animated and 3d films.
Michael over at Binary Bonsai notes that Ridley Scott has been quoted as saying ‘Sci-Fi is Dead’:
Strong words, sure. But wrong? I can’t quite disprove his accusations as such. Consider after all Hollywood’s output of sci-fi over the last decade, and the words ‘questionable quality’ comes to mind. Summer blockbusters like Transformers, sure, but not since The Matrix, has there been something which truly boggled the mind.
This is instinctively up there with print being dead in the misunderstanding of use versus must-be-dead stakes.
Sci-Fi isn’t dead. It is still very much a misunderstood genre by a great many of the studios that release it.
Have we exhausted a lot of ‘pop culture’ sci-fi favourites such as Star-trek and Star-wars? Sure.. they’re a bit tired now.. but what about Robert A Heinlein’s material as an example? And there is a metric ton of fresh and new material being generated daily.
It’s not that Sci-Fi is dead, rather Hollywood is fast running out of material to endlessly re-re-cycle. They are deathly afraid of “new” and “different”. Let’s not forget how badly Blade Runner did on first release - it wasn’t as well-known a story then:
Sir Ridley was pressurised into altering his original vision for the film after it tested badly with preview audiences. At the behest of the studio he introduced a voiceover narration to explain the story to audiences and tacked on a happy ending. #
Let’s also remember why Firefly failed to ignite. The network killed it by playing episodes out of order and failed to allow time for it to breathe and gain a following, despite early reviews being positive in the main. The same following that has now manifested itself regardless and is far far stronger than the entire time the show originally aired.
Like Blade Runner it was perhaps a little ahead of it’s time. It has also in part primed an audience that “different” is OK, leading to a resurgence in Sci-Fi with shows like Battlestar Galactica being relaunched in its wake. And what about Lost? That quirky little show that crossed a Gilligan’s Island concept with the slasher genre. And went on to be a massive hit. Isn’t that also within the Sci-Fi genre? And it’s not exactly a carbon copy of older shows, is it?
Despite an audience ready for and craving something new the edgier, less well known pieces are, no matter how well written, often discarded in favour of yet another remake of the same thing that’s been done multitudes of times previously. Galactica and, to a lesser extent, Lost are the (very) rare exceptions.
Going back to Star-trek as an example, the franchise1 ultimately fizzled out because networks were afraid to let new stories air. And when they finally took that risk ((the last season of Enterprise was stunning in comparison to the prior seasons)) it was already too late.
The world has begun to move on from wanting to see the same arc-less-repeated-story-in-a-box recycled endlessly. And it seems apparent that the industry is afraid to follow us blindly into unknown territory. They don’t have metrics on probable viewer counts — how do you market advertising spots to an entirely new series running on a previously unused story arc? Or plan the sales pitch for an entirely new Major Motion Picture?
They panic and often drop an idea well before it has a chance to prove them wrong and pick the safer known option; yet another sequel of some cute story about a kid forgotten and left behind at home to cause mayhem when the baddies try to break in.
So much so the latest Babylon 5 releases are all direct to DVD. The original series has a cult following and there have been numerous attempts to kick-start another series. Relatively speaking the universe had barely been scratched and there was and is a lot left of Straczynski’s vision yet to be told. And he’s going to tell those stories regardless — even if it’s via direct-to-dvd.
Ultimately then the industry just isn’t at a place yet where it can embrace “new” and give it life and that is most pronounced in motion pictures where multi-million dollar investments are at stake. They’re too busy milking the past and too afraid to invest in the future, something Sci-Fi is foundered on. And it is a very rare instance of late that such a film is given the green light to proceed.
- like many other Sci-Fi greats (↩)
Like Admiral Ackbar
says,
It’s a trap!
Warning, content may offend, contains blood, comedy, violence, more blood, more violence, lots more blood and bad acting..
This, is what JJ Abrams has been up to while you weren’t watching - keep an eye on this one.
It’s been a little sobering looking at Internet usage, over the last 3 years, via my current Broadband ISP. I currently have an ADSL2+ connection, that hums along with an (on average) connection speed of 13mbits/sec (downstream) and 2.4mbits/sec (upstream).
That translates to real world download speeds of 1.3mbytes per second and some 240kbytes per […]
"The trailer for the upcoming movie Babylon 5: The Lost Tales — Voices in the Dark has been posted at the official Babylon 5 site." — via slashdot, B5: TLT trailer is now available, release date is slated as July 21. Sure beats yet more iphone news, eh
There are a few things still worth watching on the tube - and Seth Green’s
robot chicken is right the hell up there. In that vein, may I present robot chicken vs star wars.
You’re welcome.
From the too-cool-for-school department, comes
Justin Shattuck’s idea of a fun time:
For 30 days I am going to be
giving away rides to individuals to anywhere in North America! No, I’m not crazy — but it sure is going to be fun! I just wanted to let you know because I am […]
There are times I just wonder who is actually driving the DVD market and which sector is worse, the companies who create parasitical software and systems to hobble DVD technologies.. or the studios that lap it up?
“New technology in the form of
a chip smaller than the head of a pin will supposedly thwart DVD […]
Just goes to show - not all robots are out to kill, main and destroy. Just like us, they have certain.. desires and.. well.. urges.
Once apon a time, using a 17″ flat panel display (indeed, owning any kind of TFT display) was considered pretty darn geeky and cool. Having received a good year or two out of my no-name 17″ Chinese knock-off it became increasingly clear I needed more desktop real-estate.. enter, stage left the ASUS VW192T, a 19″ DVI widescreen display sporting a maximum of 1440×900dpi with a trifle five millisecond refresh rate.






